Abstract
Optimal spare parts management strategies allow sustaining a system's availability, while ensuring timely and effective maintenance. Following a systemic perspective, this paper starts from the Multi-Echelon Technique for Recoverable Item Control (METRIC) to investigate the potential use of a Weibull distribution for modelling items' demand in case of failure. Adapting the analytic formulation of METRIC through a Discrete Weibull distribution, this study originally proposes a METRIC-based model (DW-METRIC) to be used for modelling the stochastic demand in multi-item systems, in order to ensure process sustainability. The DW-METRIC has been tested in a case study related to an industrial plant constituted by 98 items in a passive redundancy configuration. Comparing the results via a simulation model, the outcomes of the study allow defining applicability criteria for theDW-METRIC, in those settings where theDW-METRIC offers more accurate estimations than the traditional METRIC.
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Patriarca, R., Hu, T., Costantino, F., Gravio, G. D., & Tronci, M. (2019). A System-Approach for Recoverable Spare Parts Management Using the DiscreteWeibull Distribution. Sustainability (Switzerland), 11(19). https://doi.org/10.3390/su11195180
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